I made a post back in June of 2014 about some weather equipment upgrades, and while I haven't gotten around to replacing the weather station just yet, but the weather computers have been.

After a great 10 year run, it was time to replace my trusty Dell tower with something a little smaller (ok... a LOT smaller) that consumed less power. I had originally decided to go with a Mini-ITX case and Atom processor, so I ordered all the pieces and got everything running on it. But after about 6 months, it took a dive, so I had to resuscitate the Dell until a new computer could be ordered.

I run a lot of weather software as well as the software to manage the snapshots and time lapse videos for four webcams, and that alone is no easy task. So I decided to split my weather applications between two computers... the question was, what computers?

I knew I wanted a small form factor, so a laptop size or smaller would be required, and the smaller size implies less power consumption as well. After doing quite a bit of research, I decided on the Intel NUC as the model I wanted. I actually have two different NUC's, and I'll get into that later.

The NUC

If you've never heard of a NUC, here's what it is in a nutshell. NUC's are made by Intel, and are small form factor computers. They are available using the Intel i3 through i7 processors, and have everything you need built into one board.​Mine are 4.5"x4.5"x2" in size, i5 processors (they are available with i7 processors), one has 8 GB and the other 16 GB of RAM, both use SSD's for the OS boot drive and I have added 1 TB internal drives as well. They will drive a 4K TV signal through the HDMI port, 7.1 surround sound, 1 gb ethernet, WiFi 802.11ac, and Bluetooth. Oh... and they pull about 6-10 watts each. :-) I purchased and installed Windows 7 Professional 64bit for both NUC's. I use the ethernet connection in the living room using a 1 foot CAT6 cable, but run wireless from the bedroom computer.

The primary purpose is to capture and upload images every 10 seconds from my four webcams, and in the evening, create time lapse videos from the saved images.

It runs the Weather Message software. Weather Message allows me to capture weather alerts and messages from the EMWIN/Weather Wire stream, and then sends those to my NorthGeorgiaWeather page on Facebook. to my DaculaWeather Twitter feed, and via email to subscribers. I log all of these alerts to files, and there are 15 different FTP processes handling that.

This little box also acts as a Media Server and I primarily use it for music. Instead of using the 7.1 audio out, I will sometimes use the external DragonFly USB DAC running to my receiver. The internal drive has about 30,000 songs that I run though MediaMonkey/JRiver Media Player. But I normally play my music from my networked Oppo BDP-103 from an external drive that is attached to this computer.

Fig 2

Fig 3

In the bedroom is another NUC (Intel NUC5i5RYK with Core i5 Processor 2.7 GHz ) that runs the main weather software components and is connected directly to the weather console. The computer runs the Weather-Display software through VirtualVP software. It also uses Fling FTP software for uploads for many of the task that are running on this box. ​This one has Crucial 16GB memory kit, and a Samsung EVO 850 250 GB solid state drive. The video is through the mini-display port to HDMI adapter to a 22" LED monitor. The monitor was a cheap choice for what I wanted, but I would recommend that you look for something with a more adjustable stand. I had to place this one on something to raise it up. But this one did have what I needed... a VESA mount on the back. The NUC has VESA mounts and that allows you to mount the NUC on the back of the monitor which I did.The left image is the messy view, none of this can be seen from the front, this is looking down from the top. You'll also notice a powered USB hub (with blue lights) (Fig 4). The right image (Fig 5) is a little further away looking down on the top of the monitor.

Fig 4

Fig 5

Here's the monitor. As you can see, the computer and cables are all hidden from view. I also have two external hard drives attached for backup purposes (stacked just to the right of the monitor)

These little boxes are awesome. Almost totally silent and hidden out of the way, both of these pull 6-12 watts of power each according to my APC UPS's, compared to the 150-180 watts the old Dell tower pulled. And if you've never used a computer with a SSD for the operating system, you don't know what fast is, these things can boot to the Desktop in about 10 seconds.

I wouldn't hesitate in recommending these for home use. If you have any question, feel free to ask! :-)